Instructional Video2:59
SciShow

What Causes Auroras?

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow tackles a Quick Question with a longish answer: What causes auroras? TL;DR: It's a breathtaking display of particle physics in action.
Instructional Video16:20
TED Talks

Frans Lanting: The story of life in photographs

12th - Higher Ed
In this stunning slideshow, celebrated nature photographer Frans Lanting presents The LIFE Project, a poetic collection of photographs that tell the story of our planet, from its eruptive beginnings to its present diversity. Soundtrack...
Instructional Video4:23
SciShow

Cruithne, the Asteroid With a Horseshoe Orbit

12th - Higher Ed
There’s a small asteroid that appears to orbit Earth in a horseshoe shape. Sometimes referred to as Earth’s second moon, but it's orbit is much weirder than that.
Instructional Video3:36
SciShow

Foldit Gamers FTW

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us how some gamers are outperforming sophisticated computer programs to help solve the puzzle of protein folding and to assist scientists in finding better treatments for HIV/AIDS, cancer, and Alzheimer's.
Instructional Video9:22
TED Talks

TED: Shape-shifting tech will change work as we know it | Sean Follmer

12th - Higher Ed
What will the world look like when we move beyond the keyboard and mouse? Interaction designer Sean Follmer is building a future with machines that bring information to life under your fingers as you work with it. In this talk, check out...
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow

Slingshot Spiders Put Fighter Pilots to Shame

12th - Higher Ed
There are all kinds of ways that a spider can catch its prey, but few species are as extreme as the slingshot spider!
Instructional Video4:21
SciShow

One step closer to real warp drives?

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have long been looking for a loophole for getting past the speed of light, and they might be one step closer to achieving that.
Instructional Video3:51
SciShow

Why Does Squinting Help You See Better?

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever tried to make out something that was really far away, odds are you squinted while doing it. It's basically involuntary! But does narrowing your field of vision really help you see things better?
Instructional Video7:33
Amoeba Sisters

Protein Structure and Folding

12th - Higher Ed
After a polypeptide is produced in protein synthesis, it's not necessarily a functional protein yet! Explore protein folding that occurs within levels of protein structure with the Amoeba Sisters! Primary, secondary, tertiary, and...
Instructional Video16:51
TED Talks

Ron Eglash: The fractals at the heart of African designs

12th - Higher Ed
'I am a mathematician, and I would like to stand on your roof.' That is how Ron Eglash greeted many African families he met while researching the fractal patterns he'd noticed in villages across the continent.
Instructional Video3:37
SciShow

A Cure for Ebola, Rabies, & Other Virus Villains?

12th - Higher Ed
Viruses are among humanity's greatest threats and it seems like they're always one step ahead of us. But this week, biologists say that they've discovered a new weapon we can use against some of our most nefarious virus enemies - and it...
Instructional Video11:29
TED Talks

Sheperd Doeleman: Inside the black hole image that made history

12th - Higher Ed
At the center of a galaxy more than 55 million light-years away, there's a supermassive black hole with the mass of several billion suns. And now, for the first time ever, we can see it. Astrophysicist Sheperd Doeleman, head of the Event...
Instructional Video3:02
SciShow

These Shrimp Love a Good Boil

12th - Higher Ed
For most living things, scalding water is deadly. But it turns out there are some deep sea shrimp that do like a good boil.
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

No Hips, No Problem: Better Hip Replacements From Snakes

12th - Higher Ed
If you want to make a better hip replacement, who better to turn to than… a snake? While these hip-less creatures might seem like a weird choice for help with this particular issue, a major part of creating comfortable, long-lasting...
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

MU69 is Flat, and No One Knows Why - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
MU69 seems to be much flatter than we thought and the Gaia space telescope can tell us where galaxies have been and, maybe, where they're going.
Instructional Video5:07
SciShow

The First Results on the Interstellar Asteroid!

12th - Higher Ed
Our asteroid news edition this week clears up some misleading headlines regarding 3200 Phaethon, and our interstellar visitor has both a new name and a shape we haven’t seen before.
Instructional Video17:43
TED Talks

Yves Behar: Designing objects that tell stories

12th - Higher Ed
Designer Yves Behar digs up his creative roots to discuss some of the iconic objects he's created (the Leaf lamp, the Jawbone headset). Then he turns to the witty, surprising, elegant objects he's working on now -- including the "$100...
Instructional Video13:24
TED Talks

TED: The story of 'Oumuamua, the first visitor from another star system | Karen J. Meech

12th - Higher Ed
In October 2017, astrobiologist Karen J. Meech got the call every astronomer waits for: NASA had spotted the very first visitor from another star system. The interstellar comet -- a half-mile-long object eventually named `Oumuamua, from...
Instructional Video4:37
SciShow

New Discoveries from Our Second Interstellar Visitor - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
This year, scientists have had a chance to study something pretty mind-boggling: a comet that came from outside of our solar system.
Instructional Video11:10
TED Talks

Sarah T. Stewart: Where did the Moon come from? A new theory

12th - Higher Ed
The Earth and Moon are like identical twins, made up of the exact same materials -- which is really strange, since no other celestial bodies we know of share this kind of chemical relationship. What's responsible for this special...
Instructional Video9:17
SciShow

6 Animals That Thrive Upside-Down

12th - Higher Ed
For humans, being upside-down isn’t a comfy way to hang out for very long, but for these six animals, upside-down feels just right! Chapters THREE-TOED SLOTH 0:38 UPSIDE-DOWN JELLYFISH 2:10 NUTHATCH 3:37 RED-HEADED WOODPECKER 3:57 4:55...
Instructional Video3:53
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Pizza physics (New York-style) - Colm Kelleher

Pre-K - Higher Ed
People love eating pizza, but every style of pie has a different consistency. If "New York-style"--thin, flat, and large--is your texture of choice, then you've probably eaten a slice that was as messy as it was delicious. Colm Kelleher...
Instructional Video5:46
SciShow

How Slime Mold Is Tackling Mysteries of Cosmology - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
We might be able to use slime molds to help predict the shape of matter in the universe, and the Rosetta mission may have figured out why many comets seem to be missing a bunch of nitrogen.
Instructional Video14:43
Amoeba Sisters

Mega Genetics Review

12th - Higher Ed
Ready to review how to do different types of Mendelian and Non-Mendelian Punnett square problems with The Amoeba Sisters? This video reviews one-trait / monohybrid crosses, two-trait / dihybrid crosses, incomplete dominance, codominance,...